DialecticMaterialist said:Well they still accept the Bible, which includes a story you may have heard of called Genesis.
OK, so your position is the complete either, or the complete or.
Either you accept everything in the Bible, or you reject everything in the Bible.
Since I read the Bible as an obvious evolution of a race of people's understanding of God, I see no reason why I should accept everything, or reject everything, as you would have me do.
Except now its a metaphor or misunderstanding (but still revealed truth from God.)
It is how human's understand. How a human expresses an encounter with God is dependent upon the human. It is up to every individual to judge such encounters as put on paper.
Listen, I'm not going to try to persuade you to read any portion of the Bible and see what I see. You make your own judgments, I'll make my own judgments. If you chuck the whole Bible in the trash, fine. You *must* be able to comprehend, however, that other people see no reason to act in the complete acceptance/complete rejection fashion.
If I open a bag of trail mix, is it not possible for me to throw away the raisins and eat everything else?
(Personally I wouldn't throw any part of the Bible away, I would just draw truth from each part in different ways).
And now God directs things by means of the cruel and inefficient process of evolution...because He is mysterious.
I don't believe God directs evolution, though I am open to entertaining the notion that he does, and may one day change my mind and think that he does. Who knows.
Some people do believe God directs evolution. Life is cruel, so I don't know why evolution should not be cruel. Life is inefficient, so I don't know why evolution should be efficient. We have the realities of daily existence, which Christian dogma explains, yet you would have the realities of evolution not have the same features of the realities of daily existence. Meaning, if daily life was *not* cruel, or *not* inefficient, I would think you have an excellent point here.
And the process is telological in a subtle untestable way. Also a soul was added during human evolution, though it has no impact on anything we experience.
Was? No, continues to be. Every time a human is born. Whether or not you feel it has an impact is up to you.
Superfluous entities? Naawww.
You don't have to be all sarcastic. Look, I understand your worldview. Yes, God is a superfluous entity in your worldview. If you want to construct a worldview based solely on limiting superfluous entities that is fine.
Superfluous is a matter of reasoning implemented so we don't make stuff up. It is only a matter of perspective in so far as that perspective adds enough data to make the viewpoint necessary.
And I consider abiogenesis making stuff up. You think I make up superfluous stuff, I think you make up superfluous stuff. It is entirely a matter of perspective. You add data that was never observed, could never be observed, etc. And so do I.
Taste has nothing to do with it. (Unless you are a cognitive relativist.)
I am glad you don't find my beliefs distasteful. A lot of people on this forum do.
If you think there are superfluous entities in evolution tell me what they are.
The entities that must have existed, but are not represented in the fossil record. You're the gradualist, not me. There have to be more entities in a gradualistic mindset, right?
-Elliot
